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Wilshere back, but Arsenal held at Sunderland

Arsenal had the better of the first half in front of another 45,000-plus Stadium of Light crowd as Mannone excelled against his old club.
Arsenal's English midfielder Theo Walcott (2nd L) is challenged by Sunderland's English midfielder Lee Cattermole (2nd R) during the English Premier League football match between Sunderland and Arsenal at the Stadium of Light in Sunderland, northeast England on April 24, 2016. Graham Stuart / AFP

Arsenal’s English midfielder Theo Walcott (2nd L) is challenged by Sunderland’s English midfielder Lee Cattermole (2nd R) during the English Premier League football match between Sunderland and Arsenal at the Stadium of Light in Sunderland, northeast England on April 24, 2016.<br />Graham Stuart / AFP

Arsenal had the better of the first half in front of another 45,000-plus Stadium of Light crowd as Mannone excelled against his old club.

But they were decidedly second-best after the interval, and would have returned to the capital with nothing to show for their efforts had Sunderland shown a little more composure in front of goal.

In front of their billionaire US-based owner Ellis Short, the hosts came closest to breaking the deadlock before the interval despite being outplayed for long spells.

Former Chelsea defender Patrick van Aanholt saw his curling left-foot free-kick from 20 yards come back off the angle of post and crossbar after a foul on Jermain Defoe in a rare moment of first-half danger for the visitors.

For the most part, Wenger’s side were on the front foot, but were unable to produce anything good enough to beat Mannone, who moved to Wearside in a £1.5 million ($2.2 million, 1.9 million euros) deal in 2013 after eight years with the Gunners.

– Handball shouts –

The Sunderland goalkeeper produced a string of fine saves, the stand-out of which was a full-stretch stop low to his right to keep out a long-range free-kick from Alexis Sanchez.

The Italian also showed his reflexes as he got down well to smother Mesut Ozil’s deflected effort from 18 yards as Arsenal pressed for an opening goal.

They had strong penalty claims turned down shortly before half-time when DeAndre Yedlin charged down an Alex Iwobi shot with his arm, but referee Mike Dean was unmoved.

He had also allowed play to continue earlier in the half when a snapshot from Defoe struck Per Mertesacker on the hand from point-blank range inside the area.

Petr Cech had been largely a spectator in the opening 45 minutes, but found himself thrust into the spotlight as Sunderland enjoyed their best spell of the match immediately after the re-start.

The Arsenal goalkeeper saved well from Defoe’s angled drive, before blocking the follow-up from Yann M’Vila.

He then had to dive full-length to his right to deny Wahbi Khazri as the Wearsiders gathered an attacking momentum.

Defoe sent a looping effort narrowly wide with Cech struggling to cover after an excellent through ball from Lee Cattermole, and Sunderland ought to have taken the lead inside the final 20 minutes.

Laurent Koscielny inexplicably ducked under Khazri’s corner to allow the ball to run inside Arsenal’s six-yard box, but Lamine Kone failed to anticipate what would have been a free shot from virtually under the crossbar.

At the other end, Mannone pulled off another fine save late on from Sanchez, but it was a rare moment of concern for the hosts as the attacking threat posed by Wenger’s side diminished with each passing minute.

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